Search for notes by fellow students, in your own course and all over the country.

Browse our notes for titles which look like what you need, you can preview any of the notes via a sample of the contents. After you're happy these are the notes you're after simply pop them into your shopping cart.

My Basket

You have nothing in your shopping cart yet.

Title: Endothelial derived regulators of vascular tone
Description: 2nd Year Biomedical Science Degree Notes on products from endothelial cells that cause changes in the vasodilation or vasoconstriction of blood vessels

Document Preview

Extracts from the notes are below, to see the PDF you'll receive please use the links above


L8 Endothelial Derived Regulators of Vascular Homeostasis
The endothelium regulates vascular homeostasis
Acts as both a sensor and effector:
 Blood flow regulation/vasodilation
 Permeability
 Haemostasis
 Neutrophil/leukocyte recruitment
 Hormone trafficking
Vasodilation
 Nitric Oxide (NO)/EDRF
 Prostaglandin (PGI2)
 EDHF, CO, H2S
Vasoconstriction
 Endothelin-1 (ET-1)
 Thromboxane A2
 H2O2, superoxide anion (O2-)
Endothelial -derived relaxing factor (EDRF)
 Acetylcholine-induced doesn’t occur when the endothelium is removed
 Endothelium produces EDRF
Nitric Oxide Synthases
 Three isoforms ~60% homology – distinct functions in vivo
 Constitutive forms:
o Neuronal NOS (nNOS – type1) – Ca2+ dependent
o Endothelial NOS (eNOS – type III) - Ca2+ dependent
 Inducible NOS (iNOS – Type II) Immunological stimuli
eNOS: cardiovascular EDRF
 Regulation off vascular tone
 Inhibition of SMC proliferation
 Inhibition of platelet aggregation
 Catalyses the sequential hydroxylation and oxidation of L-arginine to produced L-citrulline + NO
 NOW acts as a dimers requiring several cofactors for full activity:
o Heme-iron and BH4
o NADPH (in reduced form – nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide phosphate)
 When NOS doesn’t work properly (e
...
in oxidative stress) ADMA and L-NMMA which are competitive inhibitors
of NOS
Regulation of eNOS activity
 eNOS gene regulation
 eNOS activity
o Phosphorylation
o Association with cofactors – e
...
BH4
o Cellular location – sequestration by caveolin-1 in a less active state
Shear stress and endothelial responses
 Cardiovascular homeostatic mechanisms of flow-mediated dilation
 Endothelium transduces shear stress into a vasorelaxation response via NO
 Shear stress induces eNOS expression & activity
Activity of NO in the vasculature










Freely diffusible gas that acts as a signalling molecule
Very short half-life 6-30s = local activity
Activity in blood limited by circulating haemoglobin α
Prevents thrombosis – inhibits platelets adhesion to vessels and activation
Anti-inflammatory – inhibits leukocyte adhesion and migration
Antioxidant
Inhibits smoot muscle cell proliferation and migration
Atheroprotective

Relaxation of vascular smooth muscle (vSMC)
 Mechanism of vSMC relaxation
o cGMP reduces [Ca2+]
o regulates phosphodiesterase
o Activates PKG  limit activation of myosin-light
chain kinase (MLCK) essential for myosin-actin
cross bridge formation  smoot muscle
relaxation
Prostacyclin synthesis
 Phosopholipase A2 activity leads to prostacyclin – rate
limiting step – activated by Ca2+ & PKC
 Cyclooxygenases
o COX-2 – inducible
o COX-1 – constitutive (predominant isoform in endothelium)
 Endothelial cells express prostacyclin synthase (PGCIS)
 Platelets use thromboxane synthase to produce thromboxane
Prostacycline (PGI2) and vSMC relaxation
 Prostacyclin binds IP receptors (GPCRs)
o Activates adenylate cyclase
o Increasing (cAMP] activates PKA
o Decreases [Ca2+] limiting vSMC contraction
Endtothelium-derived hyperpolarising factors (EDHF)
 The phenomenon of endothelium-dependent hyperpolarisation and relaxation
 Ach stimulation of artery preparation in the presence of NO scavengers (e
...
haemoglobin) & COX inhibitors
(indomethacin) indication an additional endothelial-dependent vasodilatory activity
 Small molecule with a short half-life
 EDHF effects are blocked with endothelial K+ (e
...
IKca2+) channel inhibitors
 EC become hyperpolarised and signal to vSMCs resulting in hyperpolarisation to produce vasodilation
 EC hyperpolarisation transmitted to myocytes via myo-endothelial gap junctions
OR
 EDHF is K+ exciting EC through K+ channels to activate myocyte K+ channels & Na+/K+ ATPases
Endtothelium dysfunction/activation
 Shift in EC function to reduced vaasodilation & more pro-inflammatory & pro-thrombotic state
 Classically associated with reduced bioavailability of NO & reduced vasodilation
 Blood vessels may become damage and leaky with loss of EC



Associated with most forms of
Hypertension, Insulin resistance/
diabetes, Coronary artery
disease, Chronic heart failure,
Choronic kidney failure,
Atheroscelrosis, Stroke

Vascular insult – perturbed eNOS
activity
 L-arginine may be metabolsed by
arginase reducing NO synthesis
 eNOS uncoupling: Loss of BH4
cofactor uncouples the eNOS
dimer – decreases NO &
promotes superoxide generation
 NADPH and xanthine oxidase
activity increases superoxide
production
Uncoupling of eNOS in oxidative stress
 Generation of peroxynitrite promotes
oxidative stress
Markers of EC dysfunction
 Increased circulating EC-derived soluble
adhesion molecules: sVCAM-1, slCAM
and sE-selectin
 Coagulaion factors – vWFF, TPA and PAI1
 Proinflammatory signals – CRP, TNFα
 Reduced NO – increased ADMA
 Changes in vasodilator response –
measure of endothelial vasomotor function are predcitive of long-term outcome
 Increased numbers of ciculating endothelial progenitors CEP and microparticles
Vascular complications in diabetes mellitus
 Central and peripheral vasculopathies – retinopathy, neuropathy, nephropathy
 Increased risk of CV disease and copmlication – plaque rupture and atherothrombosis
 Widespread endothelial activation preceds the development of diabetic complications
 Excessive superoxide anion (O2-) generation in mitochondria initiates the vascular injury in respoonse to
hyperglycaemia
Pre-eclampsia (PE)
 Maternal systemic syndrome cause by abnormal placentation in first trimester – clinical symptoms present from
20 weeks onwards
 3-5% of pregnancies in West
 Only cure is delivery of the placenta
 Reduced placental transport
 Altered trophoblast secretions
 Enhanced trophoblast apoptosis
 Increase fibrin deposition
 Systemic endothelial activation
 Systemic inflammatory response

Sypmtoms of pre-eclampisia
 Proteinuria
 Haemolysis
 Elevated liver enzymmes
 Low platelets
 Headaches
 Visual disturbances
 Seizures


Title: Endothelial derived regulators of vascular tone
Description: 2nd Year Biomedical Science Degree Notes on products from endothelial cells that cause changes in the vasodilation or vasoconstriction of blood vessels